Darrow had previously defended
Leopold and Loeb, the homosexual teenage thrill killers who murdered 14-year-old Robert 'Bobby' Franks in 1924 just for the excitement.

Darrow obtained a pardon for anarchists in 1886 who blew up a pipe bomb in
Chicago's Haymarket Square which
killed 7 policemen and injured 60 others.

The
Haymarket Statue dedicated to the fallen policemen was blown up by
Bill Ayers and the Weather Underground on October 6, 1969, prior to the "Days of Rage" protests, then blown up again on October 6, 1970.

Darrow defended Eugene V. Debs, the American Railway Union leader who was prosecuted for instigating the destructive Pullman Railroad Strike which caused 30 deaths, wounded 57 and caused $80 million in property damages.

Clarence Darrow represented the Western Federation of Miners leaders charged with the 1905 murder of former Idaho Gov. Frank Steunenberg.

In 1911, the American Federation of Labor arranged for
Darrow to defend the McNamara brothers.

The McNamara brothers were charged with
dynamiting the Los Angeles Times building which killed 21 employees.

Implicated in bribing jurors,
Darrow was banned from practicing law in California.

In 1925,
Darrow unsuccessfully defended
John Scopes, a Tennessee High school biology teacher who taught the theory of origins called "evolution."

The attorney defending CREATION was the Democrat Party's three time candidate for President,
William Jennings Bryan.

Bryan objected to a tooth being presented as proof of humans evolving from apes. Later the tooth was found to be that of a peccary - an extinct pig.

William Jennings Bryan won the Scopes case on JULY 21, 1925.

Bryan wrote in his summary of the Scopes trial:

"Science is a magnificent force, but it is not a teacher of morals.

It can perfect machinery, but it adds no moral restraints to protect society from the misuse of the machine.

It can also build gigantic intellectual ships, but it constructs no moral rudders for the control of storm-tossed human vessel.

It not only fails to supply the spiritual element needed but some of its unproven hypotheses rob the ship of its compass and thus endanger its cargo.

In war, science has proven itself an evil genius; it has made war more terrible than it ever was before.

Man used to be content to slaughter his fellowmen on a single plane, the earth's surface.

Science has taught him to go down into the water and shoot up from below and to go up into the clouds and shoot down from above, thus making the battlefield three times as bloody as it was before; but science does not teach brotherly love.

Science has made war so hellish that civilization was about to commit suicide;

and now we are told that newly discovered instruments of destruction will make the cruelties of the late war seem trivial in comparison with the cruelties of wars that may come in the future.

If civilization is to be saved from the wreckage threatened by intelligence not consecrated by love, it must be saved by the moral code of the meek and lowly Nazarene.

His teachings, and His teachings alone, can solve the problems that vex the heart and perplex the world."

Bryan's 1925 statement was echoed by
Winston Churchill, who stated in 1941:

"But if we fail, then the whole world, including the United States...will sink into the abyss of
a new Dark Age made more sinister, and perhaps more protracted, by the lights of perverted science."

William Jennings Bryan was a Colonel in the Spanish-American War, a U.S. Representative from Nebraska and the U.S. Secretary of State under Democrat President Woodrow Wilson.

Bryan edited the
Omaha World Herald and founded
The Commoner Newspaper.

Dying five days after the Scopes Trial,
William Jennings Bryan was so popular that his statue was placed in the
U.S. Capitol's Statuary Hall by the State of Nebraska.

Bryan gave over 600 public speeches during his Presidential campaigns, with his most famous being "The Prince of Peace," printed in the
New York Times, September 7, 1913, in which he stated:

"I am interested in the science of government but I am more interested in religion... I enjoy making a political speech...but I would rather speak on religion than on politics.

I commenced speaking on the stump when I was only twenty, but I commenced speaking in the church six years earlier-and I shall be in the church even after I am out of politics..."

Bryan reasoned:

"Tolstoy...declares that the religious sentiment rests not upon a superstitious fear...but upon man's consciousness of his finiteness amid an infinite universe...Man feels the weight of his sins and looks for One who is sinless.

Religion has been defined by Tolstoy as the relation which man fixes between himself and his God...

Religion is the foundation of morality in the individual and in the group of individuals..."

There is a powerful restraining influence in the belief that an all-seeing eye scrutinizes every thought and word and act of the individual...

One needs the inner strength which comes with the conscious presence of a personal God..."

Bryan stated further:

"I passed through a period of skepticism when I was in college...

The college days cover the dangerous period in the young man's life; he is just coming into possession of his powers, and feels stronger than he ever feels afterward-and he thinks he knows more than he ever does know.

It was at this period that I became confused by the different theories of creation.

But I examined these theories and found that they all assumed something to begin with...

A
Designer back of the design-a
Creator back of the creation;

and no matter how long you draw out the process of creation, so long as God stands back of it you cannot shake my faith in Jehovah...

We must begin with something-we must start somewhere-and the Christian begins with God..."

Bryan continued:

"While you may trace your ancestry back to the monkey...you shall not connect me with your family tree...

The ape, according to this theory, is older than man and yet the ape is still an ape while man is the author of the marvelous civilization which we see about us...

This theory...does not explain the origin of life.

When
the follower of Darwin has
traced the germ of life back to the lowest form...to follow him
one must exercise more faith than religion calls for..."

Bryan explained:

"Those who reject the idea of creation are divided into two schools, some believing that the first germ of life came from another planet and others holding that it was the result of spontaneous generation...

Go back as far as we may, we cannot escape from the creative act, and it is just as easy for me to believe that God created man as he is as to believe that, millions of years ago, He created a germ of life and endowed it with power to develop..."

Bryan added:

"But there is another objection.

The Darwinian theory represents man as reaching his present perfection by the operation of the law of hate-the merciless law by which the strong crowd out and kill off the weak...

I prefer to believe that love rather than hatred is the law of development..."

William Jennings Bryan concluded:

"Science has disclosed some of the machinery of the universe, but science has not yet revealed to us the great secret - the secret of life. It is to be found in every blade of grass, in every insect, in every bird and in every animal, as well as in man.

Six thousand years of recorded history and yet we know no more about the secret of life than they knew in the beginning ...

If the Father deigns to touch with divine power the cold and pulseless heart of the buried acorn and to make it burst forth from its prison walls, will he leave neglected in the earth the soul of man, made in the image of his Creator?...

The Gospel of the Prince of Peace gives us the only hope that the world has."

Democrat President
Franklin D. Roosevelt stated in an address at the Memorial to
William Jennings Bryan, May 3, 1934:

"No selfish motive touched his public life; he held important office only as a sacred trust of honor from his country ...

To
Secretary Bryan political courage was not a virtue to be sought or attained, for it was an inherent part of the man. He chose his path not to win acclaim but rather because that path appeared clear to him from his inmost beliefs. He did not have to dare to do what to him seemed right; he could not do otherwise..."

Franklin Roosevelt continued:

"It was my privilege to know
William Jennings Bryan when I was a very young man. Years later both of us came to the Nation's capital to serve under the leadership of Woodrow Wilson...

It was
Mr. Bryan who said: 'I respect the aristocracy of learning, I deplore the plutocracy of wealth but I thank God for the democracy of the heart.'

Many years ago he also said: 'You may dispute over whether I have fought a good fight; you may dispute over whether I have finished my course; but you cannot deny that I have kept the faith.'

We who are assembled here today to accept this memorial in the capital of the Republic can well agree that he fought a good fight; that he finished his course; and that
he kept the faith."